In this gripping drama, Gordon Gekko returns to the cutthroat world of finance after a lengthy imprisonment, forced to reinvent himself in a changed era. As he navigates the treacherous landscape of high-stakes investing, he encounters a young and idealistic banker who soon discovers that Gekko's legendary cunning and manipulative powers remain unmatched on Wall Street.
Does Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps have end credit scenes?
No!
Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps does not have end credit scenes.
59
Metascore
5.7
User Score
%
TOMATOMETER
0%
User Score
6.2 /10
IMDb Rating
61
%
User Score
Who is the notorious financier that emerges from prison in 2001?
In 2001, Gordon Gekko (Michael Douglas) is released on parole after an eight-year prison sentence for insider trading and mail fraud. Expecting a car to be waiting for him, he finds instead that he is completely alone. Fast forward to June 2008, during a significant financial crisis in the USA, where Jacob “Jake” Moore (Shia LaBeouf) is roused from slumber by his girlfriend, Winnie (Carey Mulligan). As he turns on the TV, he sees an interview with Gekko, who has transformed into an author and lecturer promoting his new book, Is Greed Good?. Upset by her father’s celebrity status, Winnie throws the remote at the screen and reveals her estrangement from Gekko.
Jake accompanies Winnie on his motorcycle to the airport; she is on her way to solicit investors for her online political magazine. As he settles into his role at Keller Zabel Investments, a prestigious Wall Street firm, Jake endeavors to fund a significant fusion research project aimed at providing alternative energy. Despite being one of the top brokers and the favorite of managing director Louis Zabel (played by Frank Langella), Jake finds resistance from the board, who are unwilling to align with his vision. Disheartened but motivated, Zabel encourages Jake to propose to Winnie, reminding him that in the high-stakes world they inhabit, one must be secure in their personal lives.
In a celebratory mood, Jake buys a diamond ring for Winnie, despite her hesitations about marriage stemming from her parents’ divorce. When whispers of trouble at Keller Zabel surface, Jake remains optimistic. However, the next day, he witnesses the firm’s stocks plummet, leading him to seek out Zabel, who is grappling with despair. Zabel cryptically suggests that the question isn’t whether Keller Zabel will fold, but rather, “Who isn’t going under?”
The plot thickens when Zabel attempts to secure a bailout from the U.S. Treasury but is rebuffed by Bretton James (Josh Brolin)—an adversary from Zabel’s past. In a tragic twist, Zabel’s struggles culminate in his suicide, shocking Jake and prompting him to propose to a grieving Winnie, who accepts amidst their shared sorrow.
Months pass, and Jake attends a lecture featuring Gekko, where he outlines the impending doom lurking in the financial industry. Afterward, Jake approaches Gekko, disclosing his intentions to marry Winnie. As they engage in a deeper conversation, Gekko, revealing the fissures in his estranged relationship with his daughter, offers invaluable insight into the events that led to Keller Zabel’s downfall. They strike a deal: Jake aids Gekko in re-establishing contact with Winnie while Gekko provides Jake with vital information on James.
As time unfolds, Jake uncovers James’s involvement in the financial disaster that enveloped Keller Zabel and crafts a strategy that intertwines deception and ambition. By disseminating falsified rumors about an African oil rig owned by Bretton, Jake gets noticed by James and secures a job offer, masking his revenge-driven intentions. After a series of intense maneuvers involving family loyalties, financial shenanigans, and battles of ethics, tensions rise as Jake grapples with the morally ambiguous waters of his choices conflicting with personal loyalties.
In a whirlwind ride that includes racing motorcycles, navigating romantic tensions, and confronting familial dynamics, Jake discovers that the stakes start to blend into a palette of greed and altruism. Gekko and Jake’s tenuous collaboration holds the potential to either mend fractured relationships or deepen the chasms between them, especially with Winnie caught in the middle.
As the financial world collapses, and they are thrust into a vortex of deceit and ambition, Jake is driven by the introspective realization that unconditional familial love can be both his weapon and his downfall. Wracked with the pressure of the impending fatherhood, Jake must make life-altering decisions that will ripple through and ultimately change not just his life but also Gekko’s legacy.
With the backdrop of a poignant economic narrative, the 2008 crash serves as a crucible for Jake’s evolution and Gekko’s resurgence, ending in reflections on resilience, responsibility, and the unbreakable bonds of family. The film culminates in a majestic reconciliation of personal ties, as Jake and Winnie prepare for their future amidst the shadow of Gekko—the quintessential embodiment of ambition, complexity, and the grey lines between right and wrong.
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